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Solid Freeform Fabrication of Ceramics Using Selective Laser Sintering and Selective Area Laser Deposition
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 February 2011
Abstract
Solid Freeform Fabrication (SFF) is a new computer fabrication technique that does not require any part specific tooling. The starting material can be either solid, liquid or gaseous. The part can be made from metallic, ceramic, polymeric or a composite material. The concept is to use a solid modeling system to define the part of interest and to reduce the model to a set of toggle point data that totally define the geometry. In Selective Laser Sintering the sectioned component is then combined with a rastered laser system that impinges on the precursor powder materials in a layered reconstruction of the three dimensional CAD designed part. The part is then formed in this manner. This approach to producing the part involves a great deal of understanding of the laser materials interactions, the appropriate choice of materials specific to this processing and how the total process integrates. Application to ceramic powders will be described. An alternative approach to SFF is Selective Area Laser Deposition where the three dimensional part is made from the gas phase. The initial gas deposition studies involving deposition of carbon from hydrocarbons will be discussed. For both of the above SFF approaches the laser beam powder and gas phase interactions and the microstructure of the resulting three dimensional forms as a function of system parameters will be described.
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- Copyright © Materials Research Society 1992